
Henry Green is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s News & Commentary, Colorado unions push their state to join Montana in requiring just cause protection and Starbucks seeks to apply recent Supreme Court precedent on free speech to the NLRB’s analysis of employer threats.
The Colorado AFL-CIO and SEIU Local 105 have filed a ballot measure that would make Colorado the second state in the country to mandate just cause protection. Montana has had statewide just cause protection since the 1980’s. As a fascinating article from the Niskanen Center discusses, Montana’s Wrongful Discharge from Employment Act emerged as a legislative compromise after judges created exceptions to the state’s at-will employment scheme that led for large damage awards for fired workers.
The proposed Colorado law would prohibit companies with more than eight employees from firing a worker without just cause, which under the measure’s definition includes the employer’s financial instability or the employee’s substandard performance, neglect, or conviction for a crime of “moral turpitude.” Workers fired without just cause could sue for reinstatement, backpay, and attorney’s fees. The measure comes as Colorado unions are also seeking to pass a senate bill that would eliminate a right-to-work-like measure in the state.
Bloomberg reports that in an argument at the 8th Circuit, attorneys for Starbucks asked the court to apply a recent Supreme Court case on free speech to its analysis of employer threats. If successful, the argument could make it more difficult for the Board to regulate employer speech. Starbucks is challenging a 2024 NLRB ruling that a store manager threatened an employee when the manager implied wage and benefit increases might be on hold if the store organized. Starbucks asked the 8th Circuit to apply the Supreme Court’s standard from Counterman v. Colorado (2023) and hold that the Board must show the manager’s subjective awareness the speech was threatening. An attorney for the NLRB asked the court to instead apply the Gissel Packing standard, which is objective and considers the power imbalance between employee and employer.
In Counterman, a Colorado man was prosecuted for threats made on Facebook. The Supreme Court held that, to find a “true threat” unprotected by the first amendment, the state must show the defendant subjectively knew the statements were threatening. Starbucks argues that based on this decision, the NLRB must show the manager subjectively knew the speech would be viewed as threatening to find a threat. As Bloomberg notes, Apple made similar arguments before the 5th Circuit last month.
Daily News & Commentary
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June 23
Supreme Court interprets ADA; Department of Labor effectively kills Biden-era regulation; NYC announces new wages for rideshare drivers.
June 22
California lawmakers challenge Garmon preemption in the absence of an NLRB quorum and Utah organizers successfully secure a ballot referendum to overturn HB 267.
June 20
Three state bills challenge Garmon preemption; Wisconsin passes a bill establishing portable benefits for gig workers; and a sharp increase in workplace ICE raids contribute to a nationwide labor shortage.
June 19
Report finds retaliatory action by UAW President; Senators question Trump's EEOC pick; California considers new bill to address federal labor law failures.
June 18
Companies dispute NLRB regional directors' authority to make rulings while the Board lacks a quorum; the Department of Justice loses 4,500 employees to the Trump Administration's buyout offers; and a judge dismisses Columbia faculty's lawsuit over the institution's funding cuts.
June 17
NLRB finds a reporter's online criticism of the Washington Post was not protected activity under federal labor law; top union leaders leave the Democratic National Committee amid internal strife; Uber reaches a labor peace agreement with Chicago drivers.